Soil of the nest-mound of the seed-dispersing ant,Aphaenogaster longiceps,enhances seedling growth |
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Authors: | ALAN N ANDERSEN |
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Abstract: | Although a major benefit of myrmecochory in the Australian environment is believed to be the targeting of seeds to nutrient-enriched ant nests, there is very little direct evidence for this. Here I report that, compared to control soil, soil from nest mounds of Aphaenogaster longiceps enhances the growth of seedling roots and shoots by about 50% in glasshouse trials. This benefit of nutrient-enrichment, however, probably only occurs when seeds are dispersed by ants that construct large, long-lived, nest mounds. This is very often not the case, and there is now increasing evidence that distance dispersal is often the major benefit of myrmecochory in Australia. |
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